Analysis updated 2026-07-14 · repo last pushed 2026-05-15
Transfer photos from your Android phone to your laptop for editing without a cable.
Send a document from your desktop computer to your Android phone over local Wi-Fi.
Move files between devices without uploading them to cloud storage or using email.
| oop7/rquickshare-x | dalpat/diskscope | fix3dll/quicmic | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stars | 8 | 7 | 7 |
| Language | Rust | Rust | Rust |
| Last pushed | 2026-05-15 | — | — |
| Maintenance | Maintained | — | — |
| Setup difficulty | easy | easy | moderate |
| Complexity | 2/5 | 2/5 | 3/5 |
| Audience | general | developer | general |
Figures from each repo's GitHub metadata at analysis time.
Both devices must be on the same Wi-Fi network, Linux users with NVIDIA graphics may need a specific environment variable to avoid a blank window.
rquickshare-x is a desktop app that lets you share files between your computer and an Android phone wirelessly, just like Google's Quick Share feature. It works on Linux, macOS, and Windows, so you can send photos, documents, or other files back and forth without plugging in a cable or relying on cloud storage. The app mimics the way Android's Quick Share discovers devices and transfers files over your local Wi-Fi network. You download the appropriate installer for your operating system, and once it's running, your computer and phone can see each other as long as they're on the same Wi-Fi network. You can then send files in either direction. The project is a fork of an earlier version that focused on Linux, and this fork adds Windows support, a dark mode, a live transfer speed indicator, and an estimated time remaining during transfers. This is aimed at anyone who uses an Android phone alongside a computer and wants a quick, cable-free way to move files between the two. For example, if you take photos on your phone and want to edit them on your laptop, or if you need to push a document from your desktop to your phone, the app handles that directly over local Wi-Fi. It's particularly useful for people who prefer not to upload files to Google Drive or email just to get them onto a nearby device. The main limitation is that both devices need to be on the same Wi-Fi network, so it won't work across different networks or through the internet. The README also notes a handful of quirks: Android doesn't always broadcast its availability consistently, so sometimes your phone may appear and disappear during setup. The app closes to the system tray by default rather than fully quitting, and some Linux users with NVIDIA graphics cards may see a blank window on launch unless they start the app with a specific environment variable. The project is still in active development, so the interface and behavior may change between releases.
A desktop app that wirelessly shares files between your computer and Android phone over local Wi-Fi, similar to Google's Quick Share. Works on Linux, macOS, and Windows without cables or cloud storage.
Mainly Rust. The stack also includes Rust.
Maintained — commit in last 6 months (last push 2026-05-15).
The license is not specified in the README, so it is unclear what permissions you have to use or modify this project.
Setup difficulty is rated easy, with roughly 5min to a first successful run.
Mainly general.
This repo across BitVibe Labs
Verify against the repo before relying on details.